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at 19:38
And this time it's Pauline...
(Photo courtesy of bbc.co.uk)
Cherie .oO "I'll bet her's cost £7.70 with a tip at Betty's on the Beverley Road"
And, could we be assured that none of my UNISON dues went towards any hair-dos, either affiliated or general?
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at 13:51
While Peter Black today highlights a story in the Western Mail by Jenny Willott I noticed closer to home an egregious abuse, potentially, of the DNA database system:
Police handcuffed a student and took his fingerprints and DNA after he tried to throw a bottle of water to tree protesters.
Jonathan Leighton, a student at St Anne's College, was arrested at 2am on Sunday in Bonn Square, Oxford, after he tried to give the water to tree protester Gabriel Chamberlain.
Now, I am against the "tree protestors" and their supporters, and I do hate littering enough to want it to be a criminal offence, albeit a minor one, but this seems heavy handed at best if the story is as it seems. And potentially to have your DNA (a part of you) on a database for the rest of your life for trying to pass a bottle of water to someone as a gesture of kindness is outrageous.
I would like DNA to be subject to Habeas Corpus, so long as that principle still obtains in English Law - which of course is already doubtful!
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at 04:03
The BBC reports that scientists have created sperm cells from stem cells.
Now I am no biologist for sure, but doesn't everyone produce stem cells? And anyone's stem cells can be switched on to produce any type of human cell? Does this not imply that it would be possible to turn a woman's stem cells into sperm cells? Is this the beginning of the end for men's part in the reproductive cycle?
Can't live with them, can live without them?
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at 19:49
...for members of the Oxford Union to vote tonight in favour of upholding the invitation to neo-nazis David Irving and Nick Griffin to speak next week comes with the news that Des Browne, Dennis McShane and Chris Bryant have said they will boycott future events at the Union if Monday's debate goes ahead with those two participating.
Me, I'm not a member so it's not my decision, and I am in two minds, having caught the bug and objected strongly when Irving was last invited in 2001 and I was on the City Council. On that occasion it was cancelled the night before when it became clear that events outside the union might make the city centre unsafe for ordinary folk going about their lawful business and leisure as Irving's supporters and Anti-Nazi League demonstrators promised to fight it out in the street outside and the police decided that it would be a public order problem.
My preference is for open and free debate - though I suspect that the two main protagonists on Monday do not really share that preference, and in a private member's club it should not be for anyone else to dictate who they have to speak to them. In a private member's club moreover made up of some of the most intelligent people in the land one would expect those members to be as well qualified as anyone to make up their own minds about the views of two of the country's most obnoxious people.
But if it's going to prove again, as I suspect, to be a threat to public order outside the Union, out of earshot from the privileged membership supping with the devils in their hallowed debating chamber and bars, they need to be told and not go ahead.
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at 22:00
The Apollo Project
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